20 Questions ~ Chapter 4

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In this episode of 20 questions, I’m delighted to introduce the ‘powerhouse’ that is Lorna Sixsmith (a name that, according to my friend Google, is derived from her occupation as a shoe-smith!  Is there anything this woman can’t do?!).  Lorna has combined her two passions – farming and writing, to create a series of books that offer a tongue-in-cheek view of life on the farm.  Take it away Lorna!

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Lorna looking quite pleased, just having published her third book!

1. Hemingway famously said, “There is nothing to writing. All you do is sit down at a typewriter and bleed.” Where the hell do you find the motivation to stick at it?

Having a deadline is a great motivator and I give myself one every year by launching a book at the Ploughing Championships. It means July and August are crazy! I do write better though when there is a deadline looming.

Image result for I like deadlines

2. Which would you prefer: monetary success or literary acclaim?

Monetary success please! I make more money per copy sold via my website or to gift shops than selling the “Nielsen” route so money over status please.

3. How do people typically respond when you say you’re a writer?
I don’t tend to say it that often to be honest, maybe it’s because I’m self-published and I’m still a bit self-conscious about it. I was at an event recently and introduced myself to a guy at lunch as ‘a farmer who writes a bit’. I got a lovely response then, as not only had he read my books but he was able to quote a couple of lines from my last one!

4. Social media – love or hate?
Love – it was a blog post that inspired my first book.

5. What would you classify as a ‘bad review’?
Someone who didn’t “get” my book but having said that, this happened to me recently with a review in a national newspaper and it kinda made me feel that I was now a “real author” as I’d got my first bad review. In hindsight, it was fine and intrigued people to buy it.

6. What’s the worst review you have ever given a book?
If I think a book is terrible, I don’t finish it and hence, don’t review it. I’m loath to give a book less than 3 stars although I have given the occasional 2 star review.

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7. Your publisher asks you to write a sequel to your very successful debut, but you never planned on writing one and you’ve left those characters behind. Do you (a) Write it and be glad that ANYONE is asking you to write more books? (b) Write it, but spend the whole time in an almighty huff about the whole affair, taking your anger out on your characters by killing them all off – swerving the possibility of a trilogy? (c) Refuse to sell out and walk away with your integrity intact, but your bank balance in a shambles?
A but probably with a bit of B in that I’d kill off the annoying characters. But then I’d reward myself by writing what I want to write for the next decade.

8. What book do you wish you’d written?
I love historical fiction that’s quite dark so I think it would have to be Burial Rites by Hannah Kent. Loved it.

9. If you could ask your favourite author a question, what would it be?
I’d love to ask Donal Ryan if writing such dark stories affects his mood. I can’t see how they don’t and wonder how he can leave them behind at the office.

10. Which is your favourite part of the publishing process?
Publishing is always such a busy time and I always intend to have the books printed at least two weeks before the Ploughing Championships so I can get them into bookshops in time for the press coverage. It’s getting easier though and the two Irish wholesalers, Argosy and Easons, both took the new book in straightaway this year. My favourite part has to be taking delivery of the books and sending out some to shops and wholesalers straightaway. Oh, and reviews, good ones hopefully.

11. What’s the biggest lie you’ve ever told a potential publisher?
I’m my own publisher but I do tell untruths to myself such as “I promise to be more organised next year”.

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12. If money were no object, where would be your ideal place to write?
I’d love to renovate a derelict house on our farm, it’s very high up and only accessible with a jeep or tractor as it’s along a rough lane. It’s a fine two-storey house so a room in it with a wood burning stove would be perfect.

13. Do you think readers still value books in the same way?
I think so. I have a fan in Co. Donegal who texted me yesterday to say she has finished my new book and wants to know when next one will be out! High praise indeed from someone who loves books.

14. What genre are your books and do you find genres restrictive?
Mine are farming with humour but yet have practical tips regarding love and marriage too. A total mixture.

15. Do you have any unpublished books, buried at the bottom of the garden and doomed never to see the light of day?
No, but I have plans for about ten books – just have to decide which one is next.

16. What was your favourite childhood book?
Oh, I can’t choose just one. I devoured Enid Blyton, Nancy Drew, the Hardy Boys, some classics such as Little Women. Charlotte’s Web was a particular favourite though.

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17. Do you have any other hidden talents you’d like to brag about?
Feeding calves!

18. Book launches: all fur coat and no knickers or a valuable rite of passage?
I had my first book launch with my third book and was terrified there was going to be empty seats as knew people might intend to be there but would be in another area of the Ploughing Championships. It was fine but I do hate that kind of thing. I love attending other people’s book launches though.

19. What did you dream about last night?
I can’t remember last night’s dream but I recently had a terrifying nightmare which was a mixture of Gone, Divergent and the Hunger Games. I’ve been reading my daughter’s books and chatting about them with her and I think Gone pushed me over the edge.

20. What would you like your epitaph to be?
She blogged.

 

You can get Lorna’s books, including the latest ‘An Ideal Farm Husband’ on her website or Amazon, and you can follow her on Twitter, Facebook, Pinterest and Instagram.

 

 

20 Questions ~ Chapter 3

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Next up for the quick-fire round of 20 questions is newcomer Niels Saunders.  The most important thing you need to know about Niels? Do Not Challenge This Man To A Chili Eating Competition!  You will lose.  And if you want to find out why he’s holding a pineapple, you’ll have to read his book.  Take it away Niels!

Niels Saunders, Author of Mervyn vs. Dennis
‘God I love a good pineapple’

1. Hemingway famously said, “There is nothing to writing. All you do is sit down at a typewriter and bleed.” Where the hell do you find the motivation to stick at it?
Once I invent a character, they’re extremely pushy. They demand to have their story told and won’t let me rest. Writing is the only way I can get them to shut up. Stories are like secrets : they demand to be told. As storytellers, it’s our duty to tell them the best we can.

2. Which would you prefer: monetary success or literary acclaim?
Monetary success. Literary acclaim is lovely and means you’re more likely to be read after you’re dead but monetary success means you have a large readership and can provide for your family by doing the work you love. Isn’t that all anybody wants?

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3. How do people typically respond when you say you’re a writer?
Half of people will be fascinated and enquire about my books while the rest give me a concerned look and say, “Oh” as if I’ve told them I have an inoperable disease. A few particularly self-centred types will forgo all talk about my own work and immediately tell me in microscopic detail about the novel they’ve always planned to write but never got around to.

4. Social media – love or hate?
I used to hate it. Social media has always seemed a wretched hive of humblebragging and negativity. Since I’ve been on the self-promotion trail, however, I’ve warmed to it a little. I’ve met some lovely people through WordPress blogs and Twitter has its moments of hilarity. I still have no idea how Pinterest and Tumblr work, though.

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5. What would you classify as a ‘bad review’?
Mediocrity. I’d rather someone despised my book than thought it was ‘okay’. At least that way my work would be inspiring passion (albeit negative) in a reader. That being said, in order to maintain my review score, I’d like to respectfully ask (by which I mean beg) readers who loathe my books to kindly spare me their wrath.

6. What’s the worst review you have ever given a book?
If I really hate a book, I don’t leave a review. I feel there’s enough negativity on the internet already.

7. Your publisher asks you to write a sequel to your very successful debut, but you never planned on writing one and you’ve left those characters behind. Do you (a) Write it and be glad that ANYONE is asking you to write more books? (b) Write it, but spend the whole time in an almighty huff about the whole affair, taking your anger out on your characters by killing them all off – swerving the possibility of a trilogy? (c) Refuse to sell out and walk away with your integrity intact, but your bank balance in a shambles?
I’m tempted to say (a) and laugh my way to the bank but my writing process depends a lot upon the nebulous instinct of ‘things feeling right’. If I was in this for the money, I’d be penning cheesy police procedurals. I can only write about ideas and characters that inspire me so, regrettably, I might end up choosing (c).

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8. What book do you wish you’d written?
Nineteen Eighty-Four by George Orwell. It’s the book that really inspired me to start writing novels and I’d love to write something myself one day that might equally inspire others.

9. If you could ask your favourite author a question, what would it be?
I don’t have a single favourite author but I’d love to ask William Faulkner how the hell he wrote The Sound and the Fury, As I Lay Dying, Sanctuary and Light in August in the space of 4 years. I’d consider writing even one of those masterpieces in an entire lifetime an incredible success.

10. Which is your favourite part of the publishing process?
I can tell you what it isn’t: waiting for responses from literary agents. Now I’ve chosen the self-publishing route. I’m enjoying the small pleasures that come every day such as a compliment on my blog, a glowing new review on Amazon or an unexpected batch of sales.

11. What was the first song you ever slow-danced to?
As an indie and rock teenager of the nineties and a house and techno clubber of the noughties, I fear I may have never actually slow danced in my life. Who says romance is dead?

12. If money were no object, where would be your ideal place to write?
An atmospheric study with a comfy leather chair, an enormous antique walnut desk, a crackling fireplace, shelves of hardback books and a whisky cabinet with a 1930’s soda spritzer.

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13. Do you think readers still value books in the same way?
Not if they’re free. Many people like collecting free stuff and will download novels just because they cost nothing. They’re much more likely to read them if they’ve paid for them. Of course, self-published authors often have to give their books away to gain publicity (myself included). We write to be read, after all.

14. What genre are your books and do you find genres restrictive?
The dreaded genre question! I’ve never been a genre author, I simply write the kind of books I’d like to read myself. Having said that, I market most of my books under the humour genre because they’re meant to be funny. My books tend to mix elements of comedy, mystery and thriller. Unfortunately, there’s no category for that on Amazon.

15. Do you have any unpublished books, buried at the bottom of the garden and doomed never to see the light of day?
I have two. I wrote them both as a teenager back in the 90s. They’re epic dystopian thrillers and although I dread the thought of anybody reading them, I still can’t bring myself to completely destroy them.

16. What was your favourite childhood book?
A Spell for Chameleon by Piers Anthony. It’s a superb fantasy novel that really sparked my imagination. I used to almost exclusively read fantasy when I was a kid and have only just got back into it via A Song of Ice and Fire.

17. Do you have any other hidden talents you’d like to brag about?
I won a chilli-eating competition and I also smoke my own meat.

18. Book launches: all fur coat and no knickers or a valuable rite of passage?
My only book launch so far consisted of clicking the ‘publish’ button on Amazon and posting about it on Facebook. I’ve yet to experience the classic image of signing hardbacks in a bookstore.

19. What did you dream about last night?
I can’t remember which means it was probably one of my recurring dreams about repeatedly mislaying my suitcase on the way to the airport.

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20. What would you like your epitaph to be?
I’m going to steal the one from Spike Milligan’s headstone: I told you I was ill.

Cover of Mervyn vs. Dennis by Niels Saunders Niels is the author of Mervyn vs Dennis which you can download on Amazon and you can catch up with him on his Blog , Facebook and Twitter.  Just don’t mention Pinterest or Tumblr (touchy subject!)

 

20 Questions ~ Chapter 2

book_nerd1Well here we are again, same questions – different author!  In the interest of full disclosure, I should say that our next author, Neal Doran and I go way back.  We set up our own writing group together called The Inklings while he was working on his manuscript (something about rings?) and I had just found a publisher for my Narnia books… oh hang on, no that was somebody else 🙂

I’ll tell you what I do know about Neal, he might make a mean cup of tea, but never give him a multiple choice question, unless you want to see a grown man impersonating a duck in thunder.  Mesdames et Messieurs, I give you the very entertaining, Neal Doran!

Neal Doran
Neal, entertaining his fans.

 

 

 

 

 

 

1. Hemingway famously said, “There is nothing to writing.  All you do is sit down at a typewriter and bleed.”  Where the hell do you find the motivation to stick at it?

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I’m not a writer who loves the mere act of writing, but I do hate the relentless dull prodding in the back of my head I get if I’m not doing it, so it’s the lesser of two irritants.

2. Which would you prefer: monetary success or literary acclaim?

I’d assume monetary success would entail lots of paying readers, so I’d take that over acclaim. I’d then use the cash to sweet-talk a few broadsheet journalists into maybe having a rethink on the literary merits of relatively tame sex jokes.

3. How do people typically respond when you say you’re a writer?

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I don’t usually tell people. I could pretend it’s so I can secretly observe human nature without people being on their guard, but it’s actually because I’ve learnt people will ask questions like ‘can you make a living doing that?’ or ‘how’s your latest book going?’ and there’s only so much elaborate fiction I can cope with making up…


4. Social Media – Love or hate?

Love and hate

5. What would you classify as a bad review?

To get all zen, I try to remember no review, good or bad, is intended for the benefit of the author, it’s for other readers. So as a reader, I’d say a bad review is one where, regardless of whether it’s one star or five stars, I can still get no idea of whether or not *I’d* like to read the book being discussed.

6. What’s the worst review you have ever given a book?

There was a book I read once that was written in such a style that I couldn’t help but hear it in my head being narrated by Alan Partridge (and it wasn’t the Partridge autobiography). I didn’t commit that to the internet though, just thought it in my head….

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 7. Your publisher asks you to write a sequel to your very successful debut, but you never planned on writing one and you’ve left those characters behind.  Do you…
(a) Write it and be glad ANYONE is asking you to write more books?
(b) Write it, but spend the whole time in an almighty huff about the whole affair, taking your anger out on your characters by killing them all off – swerving the possibility of a trilogy?
(c) Refuse to sell out and walk away with your integrity intact, but your bank balance in tatters?

I LOVE this question. It’s like a magazine personality test for authors…

  1. A… No, B. No A, no C.

 

Definitely C.

.

.

.

.

(A.)

8. What book do you wish you’d written?

I have become so consumed by the fear I’m forgetting the one book that means more to me than anything else that my brain has entirely shut down the library. Now all that I can find to hand is an old copy of Reader’s Digest, so I’m going to have to say that. The Kids Say the Funniest Things page is quite good, though.

9. If you could ask  your favourite author a question, what would it be?

Anne Tyler, even though everything you write is touching and genius and real, do you have trouble remembering what happens in any of your novels moments after you’ve finished them? Or is that just me?

10. Which is your favourite part of the publishing process?

Oof… The day something’s finally published.

 11.   What’s the biggest lie you’ve ever told a potential publisher?

It’s virtually finished.

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12.   If money were no object, where would be your ideal place to write?

A cabin by a lake in a wood that is remote and isolated, yet also conveniently placed for major hospitals and online supermarket deliveries.

13. Do you think readers still value books in the same way?

Reading books seems to be valued more now than it has at other points in my life. Yet at the same time, no-one seems that willing to actually pay much for them…

14. What genre are your books and do you find genres restrictive?

Rom-com, chick-lit, even just trying to pick the right genres for them feels restrictive.

I like to think of books like mine as pop lit. And pop-lit, like pop music, can be beautifully light, yet serious, fun but still about the most heart-breaking times in your life. So that’s quite a nice category to be in.

Of course pop can also be tacky, annoying and meaningless, so it’s not all upside.

15. Do you have any unpublished books, buried at the bottom of the garden and doomed never to see the light of day?

A half-finished romantic-comedy-thriller about a driving instructor/part-time private eye which wasn’t romantic, comic or thrilling. Oh, and a Choose Your Own Adventure fighting fantasy novel I wrote when I was 12.

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16. What was your favourite childhood book?

I LOVED that Choose Your Own Adventure book…

17. Do you have any other hidden talents you’d like to brag about?

I make the best cup of tea in the world. And it’s not bragging if it’s true.

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18. Book Launches:  All fur coat and no knickers or a valuable rite of passage?

I think fur coat and no knickers is a valuable rite of passage.

 19.   What did you dream about last night?

See above question.

20. What would you like  your epitaph to be?

I thought he’d died years ago…

 

Other Plans: The State We're In by [Doran, Neal] Neal is the author of two comic novels published by Carina UK, and the new quick-read box set Other Plans.  He can be found on Twitter, usually when he’s not supposed to be, as @nealdoran and, when really bored, on Facebook. Say hello!

20 Questions ~ Chapter 1

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I always enjoy reading the Proust Questionnaire in my local newspaper, as it gives a delightful insight into all different types of  people, without actually telling you anything useful.  So, I’m hoping to mimic this fine art of quizzery, but with authors in mind, in this newfangled thing I like to call 20 questions!  It’s a feature where I ask authors… well, 20 questions (and hope they answer them).

Obviously, this is a highly scientific questionnaire (awaiting international accreditation) created by a writer for writers, that will probably not determine anything much at all, but will give us all a jolly good laugh at each other’s expense.  *No authors were harmed*  Much.

So let’s get behind the books and meet our first victim author, ladies and gentlemen may I present author extraordinaire – Cat Hogan.

The Cat That Got The Cream!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1. Hemingway famously said, “There is nothing to writing.  All you do is sit down at a typewriter and bleed.”  Where the hell do you find the motivation to stick at it? giphy

For me the first 25k feels like I’m climbing a sheer cliff. It’s hard work. I cant see where I’m going and have an overwhelming fear of falling. It gets easier after that, the characters take over and do the hard work for me. The motivation comes from a crazy sense of loyalty I have to my imaginary friends- the people I talk to all day every day. Out loud. Normal part of my day job!!

2. Which would you prefer: monetary success or literary acclaim?

If I can swap a box of Pulitzer prize winning books for a house in the country I’ll go for literary acclaim. Otherwise, pass me the money please. Somewhere in between would be the perfect balance.


3. How do people typically respond when you tell them you’re a writer?

When I first told people in Wexford I was writing, no-one raised an eyebrow. Writers are common down this neck of the woods- Colm Toibin, John Banville, Eoin Colfer and Billy Roche are all from Wexford.
However, I do get the odd raised eyebrow, particularly when my partner is with me.  He’s a musician, so the response is generally, “Oh, how creative, but what is your real job?”  The other response is “Oh, I’d like to do that, I just don’t have time to write, or read for that matter.”  It’s not a hobby, it’s WORK!!  On occasion, I think people just think I’m mad 🙂


4. Social Media – Love or hate?
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LOVE it. Social media is your friend if you know how to use it properly. It can become consuming- moderation, a thick skin and a sense of humour help.

5. What would you classify as a bad review?

A bad review for me is one written spitefully- where the reader/reviewer has a problem with the author and writes a bad review because of  personal opinion or allegiances to other authors . It’s a rare occurrence but it happens.If I get a negative review and it’s an honest opinion or constructive in its criticism, I will take it on board. If it’s arsey for the sake of being arsey, I ignore and laugh about it to my friends.Luckily for me, the vast majority of reviewers I deal with are fantastic people. A lot of them don’t get paid for what they do but their hard work really helps an author get their book out there. It’s very seldom to find one who isn’t professional.

6. What’s the worst review you have ever given a book?

If a book is not to my taste- I won’t review it. If I love a book, I will. I don’t think its fair to be negative about a book that is not to my liking. It’s a subjective thing at the end of the day and everyone has an opinion- including the author of that book.I would say one of the worst books ever written is 50 Shades- but EL James is laughing the whole way to the bank right now and my opinion on her book sure as hell won’t make a difference!!

 7. Your publisher asks you to write a sequel to your very successful debut, but you never planned on writing one and you’ve left those characters behind.  Do you…
(a) Write it and be glad ANYONE is asking you to write more books?
(b) Write it, but spend the whole time in an almighty huff about the whole affair, taking your anger out on your characters by killing them all off – swerving the possibility of a trilogy?
(c) Refuse to sell out and walk away with your integrity intact, but your bank balance in tatters?
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What a question!!! Haha. It depends. My debut has the scope for a sequel and I am looking forward to chatting with my Publisher about that possibility but I think if I had left those characers behind and wanted to move on to something else, I’d choose option B. I would give them all the most outlandish deaths and kill off the whole cast of characters- children, animals, the lovely old lady at the end of the street- none of them would survive.  

8. What book do you wish you’d written?

50 Shades of Grey. No- I’m joking.
I would love to have written ‘I Know This Much is True’ by Wally Lamb or ‘Red Dragon’ by Thomas Harris. The Bible might have been a good option too- I have my eye on the New York Times Best Seller list so any thing that has been there for a while.
I wish I was born Steven King. He’s my hero.

9. If you could ask  your favourite author a question, what would it be?

Well my favourite author is Steven King. I think he is a genius in every sense. My question to him would be-
‘Steven, when would you like to start our intensive one on one year long training course? You know the one we were planning where you are going to teach me everything you know about writing.’

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10. Which is your favourite part of the publishing process?

Seeing the book in my hand for the first time was magical. It took a few days to register with me that it was a proper book. The whole process is surreal- especially the first time. It’s not something I take for granted.

The first time I walked into my local book shop and saw the books on the shelf- I panicked and ran back out. It was bonkers seeing my book on a shelf beside Noah Hawley.
  11.   What’s the biggest lie you’ve ever told a potential publisher?

I did tell my publisher that my friend was a journalist with the Guardian and she was really excited about doing a piece on me. That was true but it wasn’t the Guardian Guardian- it was a local paper of the same name. Technically I didn’t lie- it was more a case of misrepresentation of the facts.

12.   If money were no object, where would be your ideal place to write?

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I was born on the coast and I have to be near water. If money was no object, I would buy a lighthouse somewhere in the world and do all my writing from there.
If that’s not possible immediately, I’ll happily swan around any of the Condé Nast recommended Spa destinations in my robe and write in between treatments.

13. Do you think readers still value books in the same way?

Yes. Absolutely. Readers will always love the feel of a real book in their hands. I think buying books on Kindle appeals to the notion of instant gratification. If someone recommends a book to me- I will buy it on Kindle and if I like it, I will buy the paperback to add to my collection. No one want’s their childhood favourite books on Kindle- they are on a bookshelf at home. I can’t resist a pretty book cover. My house is filled with books. I can’t part with them.

14. What genre are your books and do you find genres restrictive?
My genre is hard to define as I don’t fit into any box neatly. They All Fall Down is a psychological thriller/ domestic noir/ grip lit. When I started writing, I thought I would be lighter and full of humour. That didn’t happen- the story turned dark very quickly.

I don’t think genres are restrictive per se. I won’t shoehorn a story to fit into a genre- I will write the story and see what happens after that. From a marketing perspective, maybe being strictly in one genre means you are missing out on a whole host of potential readers. It’s a hard one to call.

15. Do you have any unpublished books, buried at the bottom of the garden and doomed never to see the light of day?

Luckily for me the answer is no. I finished They All Fall Down in June, got picked up by an agent in August and had a 2 book deal by November. Come back and ask me that question this time next year and I might have a different answer for you!

 16. What was your favourite childhood book?

The BFG by Roald Dahl. I also loved all the Malory Towers books by Enid Blyton

17. Do you have any other hidden talents you’d like to brag about?

I am a sh*t hot cook. I love food and everything about it- LOVE to cook and bake. My background is in hospitality and I spent a few years training in kitchens. You are lucky if you get an invitation to one of my dinner parties. 🙂

18. Book Launches:  All fur coat and no knickers or a valuable rite of passage?

I had two launches for They All Fall Down. In Dublin the book was launched by Rick O Shea and at home in Wexford it was launched by Eoin Colfer of Artemis Fowl fame.

They were both a huge success- I trended on Twitter, dominated social media for days and hit the Irish Times Best seller list the week after the launch.

A good launch is crucial. It’s good business.

 19.   What did you dream about last night?

 

giphy (5)Bruce Springsteen would you believe! I was heading to his concert in Dublin with my mother and my brother and couldn’t find a toilet. When I got to the venue, I walked into a room and there he was, sitting in a chair, playing guitar and smoking a cigarette. We had a chat and then I woke up.

20. What would you like  your epitaph to be?

Here lies Cat. She was a great mother to her wonderful little boys, A good friend who always had the kettle on and she deserved her place at the table with the great writers and story tellers in Ireland.

 

They All Fall Down by [Hogan, Cat]
Cat Hogan’s debut novel, They All Fall Down is available here and you can tweet her @kittycathogan or follow her on Facebook.  When she’s not drinking her own body weight in tea or stalking lighthouses, Cat can be found writing in her native Wexford, where she lives with her family.